Electoral district of Swan (Legislative Council)






















Swan
Western Australia—Legislative Council
State Western Australia
Dates current 1870–1890
Namesake Swan River

Swan, officially called The Swan, was an electoral district of the Legislative Council of Western Australia from 1870 to 1890, during the period when the Legislative Council was the sole chamber of the Parliament of Western Australia.


Swan was one of the original ten Legislative Council districts created by the Legislative Council Act 1870 (33 Vict, No. 13). The district's boundaries included large portions of what is now the western Wheatbelt, as well as areas that are now considered part of the Perth metropolitan area. This included the Swan Valley and the Perth Hills, with the district's southernmost point being Mount Dale. The district was bordered by the district of Toodyay to the north and east, the district of York to the east, and the district of Perth to the south.[1] One of the largest settlements in the district was Guildford, which had not yet been integrated into Perth.


Nine men represented Swan in the Legislative Council between 1870 and 1890, the most of any Legislative Council district in that time. Walter Padbury served the longest, from 1872 to 1878, while William Locke Brockman, E. T. Hooley, and Samuel Hamersley each served for less than six months. Hector Rason, the district's eighth representative (from 1889 to 1890), went on to become Premier of Western Australia.[2]



Members






























































Member Party Term
 

Thomas Gull
None
1870–1872
 

William Locke Brockman
None
1872
 

Walter Padbury
None
1872–1878
 

Edmund Ralph Brockman
None
1878–1880
 

E. T. Hooley
None
1880
 

James Lee-Steere
None
1880–1884
 

Henry Brockman
None
1884–1889
 

Hector Rason
None
1889–1890
 

Samuel Hamersley
None
1890


References





  1. ^ Legislative Council Act 1870 (33 Vict. No. 13) (WA).


  2. ^ The Western Australian Parliamentary Handbook (Twenty-Third Edition) Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, p. 370.












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